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Description Deutsch · English
The Heidelberger Felsenmeer is an approximately 5 ha large area at the northern slope of mount Königstuhl above the village of Schlierbach. It accommodates many rocks of variegated sandstone, called Bunter sandstone, which have assembled to a so-called stone run. The area is an habitat for rare plants and animals and is thus designated a nature reserve since 1956.
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Please recognise that you are walking through a nature reserve and that you may not leave the paths for its protection.
At mount Königstuhl several hundred metre thick layers of Bunter sandstone reach the Earth's surface. Bunter sandstone can be found across a wide area in Central Europe: from France and Luxembourg in the west to Poland and Belarus in the east as well as Switzerland in the south to Scandinavia in the north. In the area of the Heidelberger Felsenmeer there is middle Bunter sandstone. It can reach a thickness of up to 300 metres and formed approximately 249 to 245 million years ago. The ocean, which was present at that time in Central Europe withdrew due to movements of the tectonic plate. Consequently, large rivers alternated with desert-like dry periods. Different types of sediments formed, mainly sandstone and conglomerates, i.e. rock consisting of single grains bound together by finer sediments. During the dry periods, cracks formed in a web-like fashion. They can still be found at present date. There are almost no fossils found in Bunter sandstone, which leads us to believe that is was a harsh time period for life.
1) Question:
Up to how many years passed during the period of formation of the middle Bunter sandstone, until one millimetre of the stone we see today was formed?
Due to the above-mentioned web-like cracks, water can easily enter the rock. During long periods of cold weather, the water freezes and fractures the rock. Larger rocks can be fractured into smaller and smaller pieces by repetitive freezing.
When temperature started to rise towards the end of the last ice age, there has been several melting phases. During such phases, the water in the upper soil layer melted first. It could not drain through the still frozen lower soil layers, rendering the surface wet and slippery. As consequence, rocks started to slide downhill and often assembled in so-called stone runs, which are also called Felsenmeer in German. This process is known as solifluction and it takes place even at very flat slopes. Due to solifluction, rocks can slide between 5 and 10 cm per year. The speed differs depending on the size of the rocks, often leading to a sorting of rocks by size.
2) Question:
Due to solifluction some rocks slid all the way down into the Neckar river. At the first stage of the cache, (S1) you find a small green sign showing the altitude of the Felsenmeer. The Neckar river has an altitude of 114 metres above sea level. Which altitude do rocks have to traverse from the Felsenmeer down to the Neckar?
Per metre of altitude, rocks have to slide 4.4 metres across the slope. Which time do the rocks need to slide down the slope all the way into the river?
3) Question:
If you walk down the path, you reach the Felsenmeer (stage S2) on the left hand side. How does the size of the rocks change along the path? What is the reason for the change?
4) Question:
Walk the path further down until you reach a junction. A couple of metres downhill (stage S3) you find an extraordinarily large rock next to the path. You can easily recognise the above-mentioned cracks in it. Describe the cracks. How many are there, how far are they apart and how long are they? Can you spot them all over the rock? Are they connected to each other or separated?
As it is usual for stone runs, the fraction of pebbles and sand is rather small in the Heidelberger Felsenmeer. Thus, it can easily drain, such that drifted soil is washed away by rain. In this rare and harsh habitat only a few specialists can survive. Among them are luminous moss, green shield moss, fir club-moss, and bristly club-moss, as well as common polypody and bilberry bushes. There are also a few trees surviving, such as Celtic maple, Spanish chestnut, durmast oak, and Scotch pine.
Additional waypoints Convert coordinates
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N 49° 24.178' E 008° 43.664' |
Parkplatz Königstuhl | ||
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N 49° 24.751' E 008° 44.741' |
Parkplatz Wolfsbrunnen | ||
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N 49° 24.190' E 008° 44.720' |
-- Station S1 -- 2) Frage: Durch Solifluktion sind manche Steinblöcke bis ins Neckartal herabgerutscht. Beim Startpunkt (Station S1) findet ihr ein kleines grünes Schild mit einer Höhenangabe für das Felsenmeer. Der Neckar hat eine Höhe von 114 Metern über NN. Wie viele Höhenmeter müssten Steinblöcke von hier bis zum Neckar überwinden? Pro Höhenmeter müssen die Steine etwa 4,4 Meter entlang des Hangs rutschen. Welche Zeit bräuchten Steinblöcke, um von hier den Hang bis zum Neckar herabzurutschen? |
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N 49° 24.240' E 008° 44.657' |
-- Station S2 -- 3) Frage: Wenn ihr auf dem Fußweg hangabwärts geht, kommt ihr links direkt am Felsenmeer vorbei (Station S2). Wie verändert sich die Größe der Steine entlang des Weges? Was ist der Grund für die Veränderung? |
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N 49° 24.420' E 008° 44.545' |
-- Station S3 -- 4) Frage: Geht den Weg weiter hangabwärts, bis ihr zu einer Wegkreuzung gelangt. Wenige Meter weiter hangabwärts (Station S3) findet ihr einen besonders großen Steinblock direkt am Weg. Bei ihm seht ihr gut die oben erwähnten Risse im Gestein. Beschreibt die Risse. Wie viele sind es, welche Abstände haben sie voneinander und wie lang sind sie? Kann man sie auf dem ganzen Stein finden? Sind sie miteinander verbunden oder getrennt? |
Additional hint Decrypt
Nyy dhrfgvbaf pna or nafjrerq hfvat gur grkg naq ol bofreingvbaf ng gur fgntrf bs gur pnpur.
A|B|C|D|E|F|G|H|I|J|K|L|M
N|O|P|Q|R|S|T|U|V|W|X|Y|Z
Utilities
This geocache is probably placed within the following protected areas (Info): FFH-Gebiet Kleiner Odenwald (Info), Landschaftsschutzgebiet Bergstraße - Mitte (Info), Naturpark Neckartal-Odenwald (Info)
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Log entries for Heidelberger Felsenmeer
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12 May 2024, 17:25 danielz1547 found the geocache
12. Mai 2024 115
Heute sind Rundle20 und ich mit dem Fahrrad nach Schlierbach gefahren um einige Caches zu besuchen.
Auf unserer Tour sind wir auch hier vorbeigekommen und haben alle Infos gesammelt.
Ich Danke allen Ownern für ihre Mühen beim ausdenken, legen und pflegen ihrer Caches da ohne euch unser Hobby nicht möglich wäre.
Viele Grüße Danielz1547
Ich platziere meinen Lognamen nicht immer an chronologisch letzter Stelle im Logbuch, sondern nutze auch leere Seiten oder Plätze weiter vorne um Leerstellen auszufüllen. Schon alleine aus Rücksicht dem Owner gegenüber um sinnlose frühzeitige Wartungsarbeiten zu vermeiden.
11 February 2023, 13:16 hou710 found the geocache
New coordinates: N 49° 24.190' E 008° 44.720', moved by 6 meters
24 June 2020, 20:12 b_smurf found the geocache
An diesem frühen, noch kühlen, Morgen wollten wir die überraschend gute Lauffähigkeit des smurf nutzen. Gelockt hatte der gelöste Major. Drumherum gab es weitere besuchsbereite Rätsel und den Earth. Genug Gründe also für eine Trainings-Wanderung um und ins Felsenmeer.
Die Fragen hatten es in sich, vielleicht stellen wir uns auch nur zu doof an... Ich hoffe, es war trotzdem ok.
Dankeschön für's Herlocken! Nun wohnen wir schon 10 Jahre hier und kommen das erste Mal ans Felsenmeer...
20 June 2019 URilomeo found the geocache
Heute stand ein Ausflug zum Königsstuhl auf meinem Programm. Nachdem ich hier den Riesenstein besucht hatte, ging es weiter zum Felsenmeer. Das war schon recht eindrucksvoll. Schön, dass mich dieser Earthcache hierher gelockt hat, sonst wäre ich hier wohl eher nicht vorbei gekommen. Die gesuchten Antworten wurden vor Ort auch ermittelt. Danke für den Cache.
Pictures for this log entry:Original coordinates: N 49° 24.190' E 008° 44.715'